Mason's mark
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A mason's mark is a symbol often found on dressed stone in buildings and other public structures. It is also found in some forms of freemasonry as a type of unique signature or identifying mark: Mark Masonry is a separate degree in freemasonry, and Scottish rules issued in 1598 stated that on admission to a fraternity, every mason had to enter his name and his mark in a register.
The exact purpose of mason's marks is unclear, although it is generally assumed that they mark the working of a piece of masonry by a particular mason, in order to claim payment. Others are assumed to indicate the position in which a stone should be laid. It has also been suggested that marks indicate the origin of the stone, or the location in which it was worked.
[edit] References
- Robert Ingham Clegg, Masons’ and Freemasons’ Marks, Mackey's History of Freemasonry, 1921
- Examples of Mason's marks[1]